62 Fed up on Adiectives? so ARE WE I . . . All we want to say about the FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL is that it's a rather nice place to live. . . conve- nient to get to, congenial to live in, and quite inexpensive. . . and we think you'll like the management because there's nothing we won't do within reason to keep you satisfied. ONE TO FOUR ROOMS WITH SERVING PANTRIES UNFURNISHED OR FURNISHED . LEASE OR OTHERWISE FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL AT NINTH STREET MORRIS WHITE PROPERTIES CORP., Owner OSCAR WINTRAB, Manager Telephone: STuyvesant 9-6400 POST LODGE BOSTON POST ROAD AT LARCHMONT. N. Y. r:r:Kl1N1 DINE An exclusive residential hotel fronting on theworld' s most fashionable boulevard and pro v i dï n g ani de a I blend of complete ho:tel service and home privacy. Apartments of two to Five rooms at moderate rentals. DANCE UNDER PERSONAL DIRECTION of ARTHUR C. HAND 57sParkAvenuø corner 63 rd Street Presenti ng ERNIE HOLST And his Orchestra with ARTHUR BROWN :JZ vt.:. 't:::::x ::-: ::::-:..:-:.:.::.:.:.:-:.:.:-:{ .:::. ;=== .::: .:.:.:. :-:.::. :.:.;.:. :-:.:"Jo:- ;Z:;' .:.:.: ::.:.:. t r ::r .. r:. ::: During DINNEJ{ and SUPPER FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE LARCHMONT 2660 ;I . . SAME MANAGEMENT AS THE COLONY CLUB-PALM BEACH : ::: :.::::::Ælil1I :::::::' ,':' :::: {S _ ':;: ) :::::/':;{:.::: :.::::"t:::::: ::}:'''': ,:,:::::.:,::::' . tz!ljllff..'mm fZ.... Uj" ..'.....f'........., Ir2J.: ..OO' I dt: '--:: :;:: f..::...: ...::: . L,ê ! ::.:.:: :;;::... "':::;E:::=lij' ..Ï-mJ : ':':--) :::<i.i i:::'-- : ; H m: :. :; .;. ..:.a":":w:<<.:".."m:-:'Ïit- v' ". 4.:":. ':;.:-:':: VR"::-:......;.;.z"z..::;:::.. :... ::: .:::::- MAY 28, 1'32 told you the story: Barbara marries Serge. A STEP up from aU this-and, to be just, a rather long step, too- is "Wild Metal," by Charles Gilson, published by Bobbs- Merrill. This is the story-rather too long drawn out, on the whole; occasionally too prosily meticulous about details; still more often too coy and sentimental about the emo- tional values in the narrative-of the life of one David Penton Haynes. Nothing much happens to him, beyond growing up, going to school, falling in love, and so on, and getting killed in the war in the end; nothing much, that is, that I could describe without going into details almost as much as the author does. The chapters have titles, mostly of the playfully allusive sort beginning with "Of" something or "How" someone did this or that, which is always a bad sign in a book, and I suppose that if I were to read the whole thing over again, I should .find it al- most too sugar-sweet, too soft and sentimental, to be borne. But then, I don't think it would be humanly possible for anyone to read "Within the Web" or "District Nurse" over again. So "Wild Metal" is that much better, anyway. I 'M afraid I haven't had much to offer you so far this week, but I have been saving the best for the last. This is "A F able for Wives," by Robert McClure, published by Double- day, Doran. In this case, also, the story suffers slightly from being a lit- tle too elaborately, too meticulously, presented; there are, in brief, too many words for its subject matter. This has to do with life among the more prosperous, semi-provincial and semi- cosmopolitan, inhabitants of one of the larger cities on the Great Lakes (Cleve- land is clearly indicated in the text): the sort of people who make an annual trip to New York, an occasional one abroad, and the rest of the time, in their ample brick houses at home, lead a cheerful, comfortable, solid life in which small-town gossipiness, country- club worldliness, staunch family feel- .. ing, sophistìcation, and naÏveté are all intricately and somehow admirably blended. This class-the one we tend to dismiss as "the upper middle class" -though it is of peculiarly American .:.:.::-: :l ( 4'-